From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
HMY Victoria and Albert (1899)
British royal naval yacht
British royal naval yacht
| Field | Value | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| section1 | {{Infobox ship/image | |||||
| image | HMSVictori&AlbertatChristiania.jpg | |||||
| image_caption | HMY Victoria and Albert | |||||
| section2 | {{Infobox ship/career | |||||
| country | United Kingdom | |||||
| flag | ||||||
| name | HMY Victoria and Albert | |||||
| namesake | Queen Victoria & Albert, Prince Consort | |||||
| builder | Pembroke Dock | |||||
| original_cost | £572,000 | |||||
| launched | 9 May 1899 | |||||
| sponsor | Duchess of York | |||||
| commissioned | 23 July 1901 | |||||
| decommissioned | 1939 | |||||
| fate | Broken up, 1954 | |||||
| section3 | {{Infobox ship/characteristics | |||||
| type | Royal Yacht | |||||
| displacement | 4,700 tons | |||||
| length | *420 ft LOA | |||||
| * {{cvt | 380 | ft | m | 1 | abbr | on}} LBP |
| beam | 50 ft | |||||
| draught | 18 ft | |||||
| decks | Five | |||||
| propulsion | *Humphrys, Tennant and Co. steam engines | |||||
| speed | *17 knots sustained | |||||
| complement | 336 |
- 380 ft LBP
- 15 Belleville water-tube boilers
- 20 knots maximum
'*HMY Victoria and Albert''' was a royal yacht of the Royal Navy of the United Kingdom. The yacht was designed by the Chief Constructor of the Royal Navy Sir William White, launched in 1899 and ready for service in 1901. This was the third yacht to be named *Victoria and Albert'' and she was fitted with steam engines fired by Belleville water-tube boilers. She served four sovereigns, and was decommissioned as royal yacht in 1939, served in the Second World War, and was broken up in 1954.
Background and Construction
Queen Victoria had lobbied Parliament for many years for a more modern yacht to replace the previous , winning this expenditure after pointing out that both the Russian Tsar and the German Kaiser had larger and more modern yachts than Great Britain.
The yacht was designed by Sir William White, with a steel structure overclad in teak, with copper-plating below the water line, and launched at Pembroke Dockyard 9 May 1899 by the Duchess of York. She was then furnished and decorated and was ready for use in the summer 1901, seven months after the death of Queen Victoria. The total cost of the ship was £572,000, five-sevenths the cost of the battleship .
The vessel had an antiquated look when launched as the design was made to resemble the 1855 side wheel steamer Victoria and Albert. Unlike yachts of other monarchs of the time the vessel was purely a yacht, not a combination yacht and warship. The yacht's dimensions were 420 ft length, 380 ft length between perpendiculars, 50 ft beam with a displacement of 4,700 tons and 18 ft draft. Belleville water-tube boilers provided steam powering two sets of vertical four cylinder triple expansion engines with combined 11,000 indicated horse power for eight hours and 7,500 indicated horse power on a continuous basis. The boilers were arranged in two watertight compartments one before the other with six boilers in the forward compartment and nine in the aft compartment. The engines were in two side by side watertight compartments. The engine cylinders with a stroke of 3 ft were arranged so that two low pressure cylinders (53 in) bracketed the high pressure cylinder (26.5 in) placed forward of the intermediate pressure cylinder (44.5 in).
Three masts were rigged fore and aft with two funnels for the five decked vessel. On the after half of the bridge deck was a 180 ft pavilion with an 85 ft dining room. A smoking room and reception room were also in the pavilion. An electric hoist was available from the reception room to the royal apartments below, becoming the first ship in the world to be fitted with an elevator.
During fitting-out the yacht had significant extra weight added including concrete ballast and even a large traditional capstan so the Queen could be entertained by watching the sailors work. This extra weight proved to be beyond the original design parameters and resulted in the ship tipping over when the dock was flooded – causing significant damage to the ship. Designer Sir William White was exonerated from direct responsibility, but lost confidence and resigned his role as Chief Constructor shortly afterwards.
Operational history
Victoria and Albert was commissioned at Portsmouth 23 July 1901 by Commodore the Hon. Hedworth Lambton, who hoisted his broad pennant. Nearly all the ship's company of 230 men of the old Victoria and Albert were transferred to the new yacht, which with an additional 100 men had a company of 336.

King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra visited their new yacht in early August 1901, and used it for the first time when crossing the English Channel on 9 August 1901 to attend the funeral in Germany of the King's sister, Empress Frederick. She was the base for the royal couple during the fleet review held at Spithead on 16 August 1902 for the coronation of King Edward VII. Following the review, the royal couple toured the West Coast of Scotland and visited the Isle of Man, before the Victoria and Albert took Queen Alexandra to Copenhagen for her annual autumn visit. In late 1902 she was docked for several months to be fitted with telescopic masts, and in January 1903 she was placed in dry-dock at Portsmouth to have her hull coated and painted and an overhaul of her under-water fittings.
King Edward later used the yacht for summer cruises most years of his reign, visiting various countries in Europe.
Victoria and Albert later served King George V, King Edward VIII and King George VI, and took part in two fleet reviews (in 1935 and the Coronation Review of the Fleet, 1937), but was withdrawn after the latter and decommissioned in 1939. She served as a depot ship during the Second World War, as an accommodation ship to , and was broken up in 1954. During 1947, while moored alongside at Whale Island, her caretaker was Mr J.G. "Tom" Cox BEM, RN. He was responsible for the care of her contents, some of which were selected for eventual use in .
Although there were plans for a new yacht to be built these were suspended due to the outbreak of the Second World War. Eventually HMY Britannia replaced Victoria and Albert in 1954.
References
Bibliography
References
- The Steam Yachts by Erik Hofman ISBN 0-8286-0040-6
- (June 1899). "Published designs (note)". Aldrich & Donaldson.
- (August 1899). "Royal Yacht Machinery". American Society of Naval Engineers.
- (25 May 1899). "The Queen's Yacht". The Marine Review Publishing Co..
- (24 July 1901). "Naval & Military intelligence".
- (9 August 1901). "The late Empress Frederick - Movements of the King and Queen".
- (13 August 1902). "The Coronation - Naval Review".
- (8 October 1902). "Naval & Military intelligence".
- (13 January 1903). "Naval & Military intelligence".
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about HMY Victoria and Albert (1899) — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report